​If you'd told Larcenia Bullard 35-years ago - back when she was teaching school kids for a living -- that she'd one day use her lofty platform as a Florida state Senator to advocate for marijuana reform, she would have banished you to the principal's office. "I would not have possibly imagined that to be true," Bullard says, laughing. "It was not an issue I'd given two thoughts to before."

Yet today Bullard - a 64-year-old woman who spent last year toting an oxygen cart around Tallahassee because of heart problems -- has become the unlikely hero of the Sunshine State's budding cannabis movement. When Bullard sponsored a bill last week that would give voters a chance to legalize medical marijuana, bringing pot reform bills to both the Senate and House for the first time in three decades, her phone started blowing up with support.

"I've been shocked at the number of people calling and promising to come to the capitol to talk about how medical cannabis has helped them," Bullard says.

The elderly politician's late-career move toward NORML was sparked by her mother's death and her own serious illness. Bullard -- first elected to represent south Dade and Monroe in the Senate in 2002 after a decade in the House - watched her mom deteriorate from Alzheimer's disease until her death this past May.

As Bullard recovered from her own bout of heart disease at home, she started reading studies about marijuana's benefits to Alzheimer's patients.

"For patients like my mother, whose only options are medicines with intolerable side effects or diseases which take away their ability to live, cannabis can really help," she says.

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